IEF 223b - Fixed Income Securities - Spring 1998

Professor: Ron D’Vari

E-mail: (preferred)

Phone Message: 351-2030

(will respond the same day, please leave a number and time where you can be reached)

Direct Fax: (617) 351-2279

Office Hours: Thursdays 9:00 to 10:00 PM or by appointment.

ABSTRACT

In this class we focus on capital markets and, in particular, analysis of debt securities and markets, conventions, mathematics, and relative valuation. Emphasis is placed on factors determining market expected yields such as default risk, liquidity, terms, optionality, and structure. Market pricing and yield quotation, day count, and settlement conventions are presented. Valuation of cash market securities such as money market instruments, treasury, agency, corporate, municipal, mortgage-backed, collateralized mortgage obligation (CMO), eurobonds fixed- and floating-rate securities are discussed. Fixed income risk measures such as duration and convexity will be derived and applied to portfolio management.

Foundations of fixed-income portfolio management analytics and strategies such as duration and convexity management, benchmark comparison, performance measurement, and attribution will be presented and discussed. Concepts such as benchmark variance and tracking, optimum asset allocation, risk analysis, and scenario optimization will be introduced.

The basic characteristics and valuation of exchange traded derivative instruments such as interest rate futures, options, and customized interest rate control contracts such as interest rate swap, cap/floor/collar agreements are discussed. The institutional and regulatory aspects of cash and derivative instruments and their applications in financial engineering and capital markets are studied.

Instructional Material

Required Reading Material and Texts

  1. Ron D’Vari, “Money and Capital Markets -Vol. I.” - Lecture Notes.
  1. Fabozzi, Frank, Bond Markets Analysis and Strategies, 3rd Edition, Prentice Hall, 1996.
  1. Ron D’Vari, “Money and Capital Markets - Vol. II.” Supplementary Reading Material and Articles.

Supplemental Reading

  1. Brown, K., Smith, D.J., Interest Rate and Currency Swaps: A Tutorial, The Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts, 1995.
  1. Fabozzi, Frank, and Franco Modigliani, Capital Markets: Institutions and Instruments, Prentice Hall, 1992.

Current Financial Market Events and Data

  1. Wall Street Journal, Financial Times, The Economist, and Business Week.

PREREQUISITES AND STUDY REQUIREMENTS

Since students’ previous coursework (in particular, Investments - FE 823) and practical knowledge and exposure to financial markets differ, appropriate reading and study will differ for each student. The lectures will assume that students:

  • Be familiar with
  • Time value of money, present/future value calculations, and discounting
  • Basic bond mathematics
  • Basic yield-to-maturity/price relationship of fixed-rate bonds
  • Bond price sensitivity concepts such as duration and convexity
  • Basic option theory (payoff diagrams, call-put parity, Black and Scholes equation, and option strategies)
  • Read all assigned readings for a class session before attending
  • Note: 25% of class grade will be based on your class participation
  • You and your group may be asked questions about the assigned readings and will be required to provide oral answers. Class will focus on summarizing the important points of the material and assist students to maximize their learning.

Students are encouraged to consult with instructor if they need advice about most effective preparation approach for class, exam, and project.

Students will be required to:

  • Attempt all homework assignments
  • Be familiar with one spreadsheet software
  • Bring to class a programmable financial calculator such as HP17BII or a lap-top computer

GRADING BASIS

Grading in the course will be on the following basis:

  • Mid-term exam25%
  • Class Project25%
  • Final Exam25%
  • Class Participation 25%

Professor Ron D’Vari

IEF 223b - Spring 1997

SCHEDULE

Session / Dates / Topics/Reading Assignments
#1 / 1/22 /
  • Overview of financial markets
  • Money market Yield and Price Calculations
Readings:
1) Chapters 1 & 2, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapter 1, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapters 1-5 & 19 F&M, 2nd Ed.
(Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
4) Bond Market Innovations and Financial Market Intermediation
#2 / 1/29 /
  • Forward Yield Curve Analysis in Money Market Instruments
  • Coupon Bond Prices and Yields
  • Accrued Interests
Readings:
1) Chapters 2 & 3, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapters 2 & 3, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Using Implied Forward Rates in Selection of a CD Maturity
4) The Calculation and Use of Money Market Implied Forward Rates
5) What Practitioners Need to Know About Future Value
Project: Team Formation
#3 / 2/05 /
  • Between Coupon Yield Calculations of Bonds
  • Bond Price Volatility
  • Duration and Convexity Analysis
Readings:
1) Vol I. of Lecture Notes - Chapter 3 (Cont’d)
2) Vol I. of Lecture Notes - Chapter 4
3) Chapter 4, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
4) Chapter 17, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
Project: Team Bios
#4 / 2/12 /
  • Duration and Convexity Analysis (Cont’d)
  • Approximating Total Return
  • Immunization Strategies
Readings:
1) Lecture Notes - Chapter 4 (Cont’d)
2) Chapter 19, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) A Note on Approximating Price Movements of Bonds Using Standard Option Adjusted Duration and Convexity (R.D.)
Session / Dates / Topics/Reading Assignments
#5 / 2/19 /
  • Yield Curve Analysis
  • Implied Zero and Forward Rates
  • Theories of Term Structure
Readings:
1) Chapter 5, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapter 5, Chapter 7 & 9, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapters 16-18, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
Articles:
4) Overview of Forward Rate Analysis - Understanding the Yield Curve: Part 1
5) Market’s Rate Expectations and Forward Rates - Understanding the Yield Curve: Part 2
6) Does Duration Extension Enhance Long Term Expected Returns - Understanding the Yield Curve: Part 3
Project: Investment Objectives and Guidelines, Team Description , Investment Experience and Qualifications To Be Turned In
#6 / 2/26 /
  • U.S. Treasury Securities: Bills, Notes, Bonds, STRIPS
  • Repurchase Agreements
  • Treasury Auctions
  • Bond Arbitrage, Stripping, and Reconstitution
  • Agency Securities
Readings:
1) Chapter 6, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapter 6, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapter 20, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
Trading: Mock Trading to Begin By Friday of This Week
#7 / 3/12
(3/05 midterm recess) / Corporate Debt and Credit Analysis
  • Different Structures
  • Corporate Conventions
  • Credit Risk and Spreads
  • High Yield Bonds
  • Floating Rate Notes (FRNs)
  • Default Risk Analysis
Non-U.S. Bonds
  • Eurodollar Bonds
  • Non-Dollar Bonds
Readings:
1) Chapters 7 and 8, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapter 7 & 9, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapter 21 & 22, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
4) Articles On Floating Rate Notes, High Yield, and Global Bonds (Vol. II)
Trading: Mock Trading Continued
Session / Dates / Topics/Reading Assignments
#8 / 3/19 /
  • Midterm Review
  • Mid-Term Exam (Take Home- To Be Returned in a Week)
Bond Taxation and Municipal Bonds
  • Bond Taxation
  • Simple Taxable Equivalent Yields (TEY)
  • Theoretically Correct TEY
Readings:
1) Chapter 9, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapter 8, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapter 23, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
Trading: Refinement of Investment Guidelines,
Actual Portfolio Inception By Friday of This Week ($500MM)
#9 / 3/26 / The Mortgage Market
  • Mortgage Loans - Fixed, GPM, GEMs, Balloons, and ARMS
  • Mortgage Projected Cashflow Analysis
  • Risks in Investing in Mortgages
  • Mid-Term Take-Home Exam To Be Returned
Readings:
1) Chapter 10, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapter 10, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapter 24, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
4) Art.: Elementary Growth Model Valuation Expressions for Fixed Rate Mortgage Pools and Derivatives
Project: Report 1 - Inception Portfolio Report To Be Turned In
#10 / 4/02 / The Pass-Through Mortgage Markets
  • Mortgage Pass-through Securities - Agency and Private
  • Mortgage Prepayments Benchmark Conventions
  • Price - Yield Relation
  • Negative Convexity
Readings:
1) Chapter 10, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapters 11, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapter 25, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
Project: Report 2 - Week 1 Performance and Week 2 Trade
Session / Dates / Topics/Reading Assignments
#11 / 4/9 / The CMO Markets
  • Collateralized Mortgage Obligations
Readings:
1) Chapter 11, Lecture Notes - Vol I.
2) Chapters 12, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapter 26, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional, similar to Fabozzi BMA&S)
Articles:
4) Anatomy of PAC Bonds
5) Understanding CMOS, REMICS, and Other Mortgage Derivatives
6) Risk and Reward in CMOs: An Interest Rate Volatility Approach
Project: Report 3 - Week 2 Performance and Week 3 Trade
#12 / 4/23
(4/16 Passover) /
  • Futures vs. Forwards
  • Eurodollar Futures
  • Bond Futures, Conversion Factor, Cheapest to Deliver, and Hedging
  • Forward Rate Agreements (FRAs)
Readings:
1) Chapter 12, Lecture Notes - Vol. I.
2) Chapters 21, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapters 28, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional)
Project: Report 4 - Week 3 Performance and Week 4 Trade
Portfolio Close-out This Friday
#13 / 4/30 /
  • Take-home Part of Final To Be Handed Out
  • Option Contracts
  • Embedded Rate Ceilings, Floors, and Conversion Options in Securities
  • Callable/Putable Bonds
  • Option Adjusted Spread Analysis
  • Interest Rate Swaps - terminology, conventions, and market quotes
  • Interest Rate Swap Applications, Valuation, and Risk
Readings:
1) Chapter 12, Lecture Notes - Vol. I.
2) Chapters 22, Fabozzi BMA&S, 3rd Edition
3) Chapters 28 and 29, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional)
4) Interest Rate Derivative Securities
5) A model for Valuing Bonds and Embedded Options
6) Chapter 13, Lecture Notes, Vol. I.
7) Chapters 23, Fabozzi 3rd Edition
8) Chapters 29, F&M, 2nd Ed. (Optional)
9) Interest Rate and Currency Swaps: A Tutorial
10) Summer Swap School
Project: Report 5 - Week 4 Performance
Session / Dates / Topics/Reading Assignments
#14 / 5/03 Suplemental /
  • Class Review (Optional)

#15 / 5/07 /
  • In-class Final Examination (Open-Book, Open Notes, 1 Hour)
  • Take-home Final Examinations To Be Returned
  • Final Project Report Due
  • Farewell Pot-lock (Bring Soda and Sandwiches)

SUGGESTED ADVANCED TOPICS FOR SELF-STUDY

Topics/Reading Assignments
  • Interest Rate Caps, Collars, Floors, and Participation Agreements
  • Financial Innovations and Engineering - Structured Notes
  • Call Monetization with Swaptions (Swap Options)
Readings:
1) Chapter 14, Lecture Notes, Vol. I.
  • Active Bond Portfolio Management Strategies
  • Corporate Financial Risk Management
  • Interrelationships Between Money Markets, and Derivative Markets
Readings:
1) Lecture Notes - Chapter 15
2) Fabozzi Chapters 17 and 18 (3rd Edition)

Professor Ron D’Vari

IEF 223b - Spring 1997

Outline of Lecture Notes, Vol. I.

Chapter 1 / Overview of Financial Markets
Chapter 2 / Money Market Instruments
  • Rate Conventions -
  • Price-Yield Relationships at Issuance and In Secondary Markets
  • Holding period, total return calculations, and performance measurements
  • Implied forward rates for CD’s and T-Bills

Chapter 3 / Bond Prices and Yields
  • Yield Conventions
  • Yield to maturity, call, and to worst calculations
  • Accrued Interest
  • Holding period returns, total return calculations, and performance measurements

Chapter 4 / Bond Price Volatilities, Risk Measurements, and Portfolio Applications
  • Duration
  • Convexity
  • Non-parallel curve moves and key-rate durations
  • Total return estimation
  • Immunization strategies

Chapter 5 / Yield Curve Analysis
  • Par curve
  • Spot or zero-curve
  • Pricing securities using spot-curve
  • Implied forward rates and implied forward curve
  • Term-structure models

Chapter 6 / US Treasuries and Agencies
  • Primary and secondary markets and auction Process
  • Bond arbitrage, treasury stripping and reconstitution
  • Federal agencies and nature of their guarantees
  • Agency curve

Chapter 7 / Corporate Debt and Credit Analysis
  • Corporate Convention
  • Maturities, Structures, and Medium Term Notes
  • Credit Rating and Credit Analysis
  • Risk Evaluation
  • Corporate Spreads

Chapter 8 / Embedded Option Analysis, Floating Rate Notes
  • Embedded Options
  • Floating rate notes with caps, floors, and collars
  • Index and spread durations

Outline of Lecture Notes, Vol. I. -Cont’d

Chapter 9 / Bond Taxation and Municipal Bonds
Chapter 10 / Mortgage loans and mortgage pass-throughs
  • Mortgage types and their cashflow analysis
  • Mortgage payments and yield calculation
  • Mortgage passthroughs
Prepayment analysis and benchmarks
Cashflow and yield estimations
Price-yield behavior - duration and negative convexity
Chapter 11 / Collateral Mortgage Obligations
Chapter 12 / Interest Rate Futures and Options
  • Financial Futures
  • Forward vs. Futures
  • Cash-to-carry
  • Eurodollar Futures
  • Bond Futures - Conversion factor, cheapest to deliver, and hedging
  • Interest rate options

Chapter 13 / Interest Rate Swaps and Swaptions
  • Conventions and market quotes
  • Pricing interest rate swaps
  • Swap risks
  • Swap applications
  • Swap designs and structures
  • Swaptions

Chapter 14 / Interest Rate Caps, Floors, and Collars
Chapter 15 / Financial Innovations and Engineering
  • Structured Notes
  • Application in corporate finance

Chapter 16 / Practice Problems
Chapter 17 / Practice Problems Solutions

Professor Ron D’Vari

IEF 223b - Spring 1997

List of References

BOND MARKET INNOVATIONS:

  1. Smith, D.J., Taggart, Jr., R.A., “Bond Market Innovations and Financial Market Intermediation,” Business Horizons, Vol. 32, No. 6, November/December 1989.

MONEY MARKET INSTRUMENTS AND IMPLIED FORWARD RATES:

  1. Daskin, A.J., Smith, D.J., “Using Implied Forward Rates in Selection of a CD Maturity,” Financial Practice and Education, Fall/Winter, 1991.
  1. Smith, D.J., “The Calculation and Use of Money Market Implied Forward Rates,” The Journal of Cash Management, Vol. 98, No. 5, September/October 1989.
  1. Kritzman, M., “What Practitioners Need to Know About Future Value,” Financial Analyst Journal, May/June 1994.

BOND PRICES, DURATION, YIELD CURVE ANALYSIS:

  1. Smith, D.J., “A Note on Bond Price, Accrued Interest, and Duration Calculations Between Coupon Dates,” FE 822 Class Notes, July 1991.
  1. Smith, D.J., “Bias At the Short End of The Yield Curve,” Global Investor, April 1991.
  1. Smith, D.J., “An Apartment Story: To Introduce the Study of Spot, Forward, and Futures Markets, the Term Structure, and Arbitrage,” The Journal of Economic Education, Summer 1988.
  1. Ilmanen, A., “Overview of Forward Rate Analysis - Understanding the Yield Curve: Parts 1,” Portfolio Strategies, US Fixed Income Research, Salomon Brothers, May 1995.
  1. Ilmanen, A., “Market’s Rate Expectations and Forward Rates - Understanding the Yield Curve: Part 2,” Portfolio Strategies, US Fixed Income Research, Salomon Brothers, June 1995.
  1. Ilmanen, A., “Does Duration Extension Enhance Long Term Expected Returns - Understanding the Yield Curve: Part 3,” Portfolio Strategies, US Fixed Income Research, Salomon Brothers, June 1995.
  1. Iwanowski, R., “An Investor’s Guide to Floating-Rate Notes: Conventions, Mathematics, and Relative Valuations,” Salomon Brothers, September 1995.
  1. Smith, D.J., “The Duration of a Bond as a Price Elasticity and a Fulcrum,” The Journal of Financial Education, Fall 1988.
  1. Feinstein, S.P., Smith, D.J., “Immunizing Against Interest Rate Risk Using Macaulay Duration Statistic: An Assessment,” Working Paper 91-48, August 1991, Boston University. Prepared for The U.S.-Japan Forum on Financial Strategies in the 1990s, Osaka, Japan.
  1. D’Vari, “A Note on Approximating Price Movements of Bonds Using Standard Option Adjusted Duration and Convexity,” May 1995.
  1. Barber, J.R., “A Note on Approximating Bond Price Sensitivity Using Duration and Convexity, The Journal of Fixed Income, March 1995.

Floating Rate Notes, HIGH YIELD BONDS, GLOBAL BONDS

  1. Iwanowski, R. “An Investor’s Guide to Floating Rate Notes: Conventions, Mathematics and Relative Valuation:,” September, 1995.
  1. Fridson, M.S., “Fraine’s Neglected Findings: Was Hickman Wrong,” Financial Analysts Journal, September-October 1994.
  1. Gilson, S.C., “Investing in Distressed Situations: A Market Survey,” Financial Analysts Journal, September-October 1994.
  1. Levy, H., Lerman, Z., “The Benefits of International Diversification in Bonds,” The International Finance Reader, 2nd Edition, Edited by Kolb, R.W., Kolb Publishing Company, Miami, Florida, 1993.

MORTGAGE-BACKED SECURITIES AND CMOS:

  1. O’Brien, T.J., “Elementary Growth Model Valuation Expressions for Fixed Rate Mortgage Pools and Derivatives,” The Journal of Fixed Income, June 1992.
  1. Smith, D.J., D’Annolfo, “Collateralized Mortgage Obligations - An Introduction,” Real Estate Review, Vol. 16, No. 1, Spring 1986.
  1. Bykhovsky, M., Hayre, L., “Anatomy of PAC Bonds,” The Journal of Fixed Income, June 1992.
  1. Carron, A.S.,“ Understanding CMOS, REMICS, and Other Mortgage Derivatives,” The Journal of Fixed Income, June 1992.
  1. Hancock, M.R.,“Risk and Reward in CMOs: An Interest Rate Volatility Approach,” The Journal of Fixed Income, June 1992.

OPTIONS, FUTURES, AND FORWARD RATE AGREEMENTS:

  1. Hull, J.C., “Options, Futures, and Other Derivative Securities - Interest Rate Derivative Securities,” Chapter 15, Prentice Hall, Second Edition, 1993.
  1. Kalotay, A.J., Williams, G., Fabozzi, F.J., “A model for Valuing Bonds and Embedded Options,” Financial Analysts Journal, May-June 1993
  1. Brown, K., Smith, D.J., Interest Rate and Currency Swaps: A Tutorial, The Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts, 1995.
  1. Babbel, D.F., Zenios, S.A., “Pitfalls in the Analysis of Option-Adjusted Spreads,” Technical Note, Financial Analysts Journal, July-August 1992.

SWAPS, AND OTHER DERIVATIVES

  1. Brown, K.C. , Smith, D.J., “Forward Swaps, Swap Options, and the Management of Callable Debt,” Article 41, The Financial Derivatives Reader, ed. Robert W. Kolb, Kolb Publishing Company, 1992. Originally published in The Journal of Applied Corporate Finance, Vol. 2, No. 4, Winter 1990.
  1. Anonymous, “Summer Swap School,” Derivatives Strategy, July 18, 1994, Vol. 3, No. 10/11.
  1. Dattatreya, R.E. , Fabozzi, F.J “A Framework for Analyzing Bonds: Horizon Return, Duration, and Convexity,” Current Topics in Investment Management, 1990 Frank J. Fabozzi, New Hope, P.A.
  2. Biby, Jeffrey “The Handbook of Mortgage Backed Securities”, 4th Edition, 1995, Probus Publishing Co.
  3. Ames, Chris, “Introduction to Asset-Backed Securities,” Lehman Brothers, July 1994.

Professor Ron D’Vari

IEF 223b - Spring 1997

CLASS TEAM PROJECT

Grade Weighting

  • Class Project 25%
  • Mid Term Exam.25%
  • Final Exam.25%
  • Class Participation 25%

Team Requirements

  • Teams of minimum 3 to maximum of 5 persons
  • Prefer teams with diverse backgrounds (new and experienced market professionals, if possible)

Initial Capital

  • US$500 Millions

Overview of Investment Management Process

  • Setting investment objectives
  • Establishing investment policy and benchmark
  • Establishing a market analysis methodology

Market drivers (macro economics, cyclical and long term trends, etc.)

Interest rate forecast (short and long term)

Past and future expected returns and volatilities

  • Selecting a portfolio strategy

Duration bet

Volatility/Convexity bet

Curve bet (barbell or bullet)

Sector bets

  • Selecting the assets

Cheap/rich analysis

Benchmark comparison and variance analysis